Meet the more than 60 Florida athletes that will represent Team USA in summer Olympics

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More than 11,000 athletes are expected to compete in the Tokyo Olympics, which start July 23. Of those who have qualified for Team USA, 63 across 25 sports have ties to Florida.

The following Olympians hail from the Sunshine State, went to college here or play on one of its professional sports teams (and in some cases, two out of three):

Baseball

Eddy Alvarez, Miami Marlins minor-leaguer

The Marlins’ minor-league infielder has been to the Olympics before, but not for baseball. In the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, Alvarez was one-fourth of a speedskating squad that won silver in the 5,000-meter relay. He helped USA Baseball secure a bid to Tokyo by beating Venezuela 4-2 in the World Baseball Softball Confederation Baseball Americas Qualifier. Alvarez will be the 11th American to participate in both the Summer and Winter Olympics.

Triston Casas, from Pembroke Pines

Mark Kolozsvary, from Eustis

Joe Ryan, Tampa Bay Rays prospect

Shane Baz, Tampa Bay Rays prospect

Softball

Michelle Moultrie, went to UF

The left-handed hitter and outfielder joined Team USA in 2011. Softball was left out of both the London and Rio Olympics in 2012 and 2016. But now, 10 years later, the Jacksonville native and UF alumna’s Olympic debut is finally here.

Aubree Munro, went to UF

Kelsey Stewart, went to UF

Men’s Basketball

Bradley Beal, went to UF

The former Gator guard will be Florida’s first men’s basketball Olympian when he takes the court in Tokyo this summer. Beal’s selection to Team USA came off the heels of his ninth NBA season with the Washington Wizards, in which he averaged 31.3 points per game.

Bam Adebayo, plays for the Miami Heat

Women’s Basketball

Sylvia Fowles, from Miami

The Minnesota Lynx center will travel to Tokyo for her fourth Olympic Games (2008-2020) in hopes of keeping her gold-medal streak alive. The two-time WNBA Finals MVP from Miami is averaging 7.5 defensive rebounds and 2.2 steals per game this season.

Beach Volleyball

Phil Dalhausser, from Ormond Beach

Dalhausser, born in Switzerland and raised in Ormond Beach, will play in his fourth Olympics this summer. The UCF business graduate won gold in 2008 but has yet to secure a spot on the podium in his last two showings (ninth in 2012, fifth in 2016).

Nick Lucena, from Ft. Lauderdale and went to FSU

Cycling

Lily Williams, from Tallahassee

Williams started cycling professionally in 2018 after running cross country at Vanderbilt. She became a world champion in 2020 and qualified for Team USA in June.

Diving

Katrina Young, went to FSU

Young will compete in her second Olympic games this summer after representing the U.S. in Rio five years ago. She graduated from FSU in 2015 and still trains there.

Jordan Windle, raised in Ft. Lauderdale

Fencing

Race Imboden, born in Tampa

Tokyo will be Imboden’s third straight Olympics. The two-time Grand Prix gold medalist, who grew up in New York and currently lives in Los Angeles, has also served as a runway model for fashion labels such as Louis Vuitton and Marc Jacobs.

Golf

Jessica and Nelly Korda, from Bradenton

Olympic rings run in the Korda family. Siblings Jessica and Nelly will both represent the U.S. in Tokyo this summer, 33 years after their mom, Regina Rajchrtova, represented Czechoslovakia on the tennis court at the 1988 Seoul Olympics.

Lexi Thompson, from Coral Springs

Judo

Angelica Delgado, from Miami and went to FIU

Delgado has competed in eight World Championships and will participate in her second Olympic Games this summer. Her father was on the national judo team for Cuba and started teaching her the sport when she was 9 years old.

Karate

Ariel Torres, went to Miami-Dade College

Torres started karate at 6 years old. He was born in Cuba and raised in Hialeah. Tokyo will be his first Olympic Games.

Rowing

Ben Davison, from Inverness

Davison, from Inverness, will compete in the men’s eight event in Tokyo. He was named Pac-12 Men’s Rowing Athlete of the Year as a senior in 2019 and competed in the men’s eight that finished fifth at the World Championships that year.

Clark Dean, from Sarasota

Katelin Guregian, from Orlando

Rugby

Perry Baker, from Daytona Beach

Baker started playing rugby in 2013 after a knee injury ended his NFL career, during which he played for the Philadelphia Eagles. He made his first Olympic team three years later but will seek his first medal this year after the U.S. finished ninth in Rio.

Kristen Thomas, went to UCF

Sailing

Paige Railey, from Clearwater

Tokyo will be Railey’s third Olympic games (2012, 2016, 2021). The USF business management graduate will compete in the one-person dinghy.

Anna Weis, from Ft. Lauderdale

Lara Dallman-Weiss, went to Eckerd College

Luke Muller, from Ft. Pierce

Shooting

Mary Tucker, from Sarasota

The rifle shooter will compete in her first Olympics this summer. A rising junior at the University of Kentucky, Tucker’s previous national and international experience includes two 2021 NCAA titles (10-meter air rifle, three position) and a 2021 New Delhi World Cup win (10-meter air rifle).

Skateboarding

Jake Ilardi, from Osprey

The 24-year-old will be among the first skateboarding Olympians when he competes in the sports’ debut this summer. He is currently ranked second in the U.S. and seventh in the world.

Zion Wright, from Jupiter

Soccer

Alex Morgan, Plays for Orlando Pride

This is Morgan’s third Olympic team. She rejoined Orlando for the 2021 season after a five-game stint in London for Tottenham.

Surfing

Caroline Marks, from Melbourne Beach

Marks became a professional surfer at 13. At 19, she’ll be one of the first women to represent the U.S. in the sport at the Olympics.

Swimming

Bobby Finke, from Clearwater and goes to UF

The rising UF senior from Clearwater won both the 800-meter freestyle — a new men’s Olympic event — and the 1,500-meter freestyle (beating the rest of the field by nearly 15 seconds) at the Olympic Trials last week to secure his spot on the Tokyo roster.

Caeleb Dressel, from Green Cove Springs and went to UF

Ryan Murphy, from Jacksonville

Kieran Smith, goes to UF

Natalie Hinds, went to UF

Emma Weyant, from Sarasota

Taekwondo

Paige McPherson, went to Miami-Dade College

McPherson became a three-time Olympian when she qualified for the Tokyo games. She also competed in London, where she won a bronze medal in the welterweight category, and Rio.

Anastasija Zolotic, from Largo

Tennis

Nicole Melichar, lives in Stuart

Melichar, from the Czech Republic, moved to Florida shortly after her birth. She is currently the ninth-ranked doubles player in the world.

Austin Krajicek, from Brandon

Track & field

Trayvon Bromell, from St. Petersburg

Bromell won the 100 meters in 9.80 at the Olympic Trials last week. Bromell overcame a series of injuries to make it to Tokyo, including two Achilles surgeries. He made this Olympic team after having to leave the 2016 Rio Olympics in a wheelchair.

Erriyon Knighton, from Tampa

Will Claye, went to UF

Garrett Scantling, from Jacksonville

Donald Scott, from Apopka

Teahna Daniels, from Orlando

Kendall Ellis, from Pembroke Pines

Taylor Manson, goes to UF

Cory McGee, went to UF

Kaylin Whitney, from Clermont

Jessica Ramsey, from Boynton Beach

Marquis Dendy, went to UF

Grant Holloway, went to UF

Volleyball

Foluke Akinradewo Gunderson, from Fort Lauderdale

This will be Gunderson’s third Olympic Games. She has a silver medal from 2012 and a bronze from 2016. While she plays for Team USA, she also has citizenship with Canada and Nigeria.

Water Polo

Ashleigh Johnson, from Miami

Johnson will compete in her second Olympics as the goalkeeper for Team USA Water Polo. In 2016, she became the first African-American woman to make the team. She ran a swim school in her hometown with her sister for two years.

Weightlifting

Mattie Rogers, from Orlando and went to UCF

Rogers can now add Olympian to her resume, which already has seven world medals (including silvers from 2017 and 2019) and eight U.S. records.

Wrestling

Alejandro Sancho, from Miami

Sancho defeated former Olympian Ellis Coleman at trials to secure his bid to Tokyo. He also enrolled in the U.S. Army in 2018 and is an army specialist and member of the Army’s World Class Athlete Program.